Belly Mouth

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A classic trope, the belly of a creature/character/machine actually has a mouth directly outside from its place in the body. Sometimes it's disguised and well hidden, other times it's used as an intimidation tool, or sign to state that the character in question is a Villainous Glutton, a Big Eater or somewhere in between when regarding the consumption of vast quantities in (usually) organic material, even going so far as to make it out to be a horrifying monster, or from time to time, a comical character.

Note: In some cases, the belly mouth is actually a symbiotic creature, or has a mind of its own, that uses the host's body to get about, while adding an additional passage to the stomach via which more consumables can enter.

Deidara from Naruto has mouths on his hands and chest, which he uses to produce an explosive clay in various shapes such as spiders and birds. He turns himself into a Fantastic Nuke if he eats the clay through his chest mouth. Technically it's where his heart is located, but it still counts.

Feedler from D.Gray-Man has a power which, when advanced to its ultimate form, sprouts a grotesque smiling maw stretching from beneath his rib cage to waist line.

In one manga chapter and anime episode of Urusei Yatsura, a bunch of fossils, put together into the approximate shape of a weird bird by Ataru, are animated by Lum using another piece of Oni tech. The resulting creature appears to have a belly mouth, as its "body" was the skull of some ceratopsian.

The cover◊ of the comic book adaption of Se7en dealing with the Gluttony victim shows this.

Gronks in Strontium Dog eat metal through mouths in their bellies. They are cute little blighters (almost bordering on Small Annoying Creature territory) and are very embarrassed by other races' horror at their physiology.

From Gaiman's The Eternals, there is Morjak, a Deviant who has a second mouth in his stomach.

Films — Animation

One of the crew members on the ship in Treasure Planet appears to be a normal-looking human with dreadlocks at first... Before it's revealed that he's a Cephalothorax, with (large) face and mouth are on his (large) stomach, and that what looked like his head was another spider-ish crew member and the things that looked like dreadlocks are really his legs.

No-Face in Spirited Away has one. It's most obvious in the bathhouse scene where he goes berserk, but later in the scene at Zeniba's house you can see it again briefly as he's eating cake.

Films — Live-Action

The Subhumanoids in both sequels to Class of Nuke 'Em High have these where the bellybutton should be. They're small, regular human mouths, though, and not particularly monsrtous. Which, to some, makes it worse.

One of the cases of Devil Woman Doctor, a film of the infamousGuinea Pig series of Japan, is a man who has grown a face-shaped "tumor" on his belly. The "tumor" can talk, sing, bite, and seems to be a cool dude.

One of the many ways in which the eponymous being in The Thing (1982) surprises the humans, and the first time it reveals its ability to take human form, is when a doctor trying to electrically resuscitate a collapsed comrade has his arms bitten off when the Thing opens its chest into a toothy maw before he can zap it further.

In The Thing (2011), one Thing diagonally opens its ribcage into a snapping mouth while attempting to kill a female protagonist.

The Fat Man, a short story by Joe R. Lansdale: The title character has what appears to be an ugly half-moon tattoo (with the points upward) on his belly, which turns out to be a mouth. The Fat Man is also an artificial construct, controlled by a hideous, man-eating creature, who uses the mouth to speak and to suck in both regular food and its human victims.

Live-Action TV

One episode of Doctor Who involves a time paradox caused by Rose going back in time with the Doctor to prevent her father's death, the creatures sent to deal with the paradox, who were never named on screen but called "Reapers" only had mouths on their stomachs, and claws which they used to shove victims down their throats.

Back in The '90s, Nickelodeon ran a series of live-action shorts featuring characters that consisted of talking belly buttons. They even managed to make one of these shorts basically an anti-smoking PSA.

In 3.5 Edition, the Klurichir demon is a massive monster with more mouth than stomach for a belly, even though it has a boar head just above it.

Monsters of Faerun describes the Tomb Tapper, a giant humanoid made of stone, which has the mouth on its belly too. Somewhat necessarily, since it's also The Blank and has no facial features whatsoever.

Early models for the Great Unclean One, Greater Daemon of Nurgle from Warhammer and Warhammer 40,000, were a giant diseased hulk that had a grinning mouth in its belly.

Villains & Vigilantes adventure "Devil's Domain". Abomination demons have a malevolent face on their chest, which includes a large mouth.

Toys

Mongroid from the Tortured Souls line. He's not so much a creature with a Belly Mouth as he is a giant walking mouth with a head and limbs sticking off the sides.

Vaka-Waka from Mixels, though with the twist that each are their own personality and person. Despite the fact both of them have the ability to eat standardly, Waka, the stomach mouth, is forced to handle the digestion and "output", which isn't good when Vaka eats things like fish heads or battery acid...

The Fallen from Devil May Cry 3 normally appear to be angels with six wings; two on their back, outstretched, two covering (or acting as) their legs, and two acting as arms, the latter wings hold a divine sword and act as a shield, protecting the Fallen from attacks. Dante can break their shield wing to reveal a grotesque Belly Mouth, which, aside from looking pretty horrifying, also serves as the angel's weakspot.

Ghom, a minor boss in Diablo III sports such a mouth. A voracious eater it is implied that captured soldiers were either eaten by Ghom or feed to others to fatten them up before Ghom eating them.

The Big Bad of Holy Umbrella has one of these. During his short stint as a playable character, you can shoot powerful flame attacks from it. Taken Up to Eleven by the final boss, who not only sports one, but his body is made entirely out of interlocked metallic faces.

The series's regular zombies have their torsos ripped open. They are known to stuff food into their chest "mouths".

The fast "Species X" zombies from Opposing Force as well.

The Ducky Goose and Drak Quack Dream Eaters in Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance have a very prominent one, from which they generate various party toys and fireworks to attack with. The former's Japanese name (Haraguchi Ahiru) even translates literally into "belly mouth duck". However, the way their heads hang back limply when they run, coupled with the suspiciously eye-like markings above their belly mouths can make one question whether or not they're really just Waddling Heads with a fake head on top.

Dusknoir in the Pokémon games. According to its Pokédex entry, the mouth leads to the Underworld.

In Pokémon Sun and Moon the Ultra Beast Guzzlord (UB-05 Glutton) has a small, conular head mounted on a body with a huge maw and two eyes accompanied by eyebrow-like protrusions.

In Serious Sam, one monster has no head, but a big eye and mouth on its torso.

Nightmare from the Soul Series has a mid-section completely compromised of a mouth and teeth.

Super Ghouls 'n' Ghosts: In stage 6, bosses Asutaroto, Nebiroth, and Sardius(the final boss) all have belly mouths. The former two spit out fire while the latter spits out platforms for arthur to stand on in order to attack Sardius. Mid-boss Lucifer in Ghouls 'n Ghosts also has eyes on his torso and a mouth on his abdomen.

The Outland version of Doomguard demons in The Burning Crusade, such as Omor the Unscarred, have a face with a gaping mouth on their chest. Some of them can breathe fire from it.

In the Warlords of Draenor version of Hellfire Citadel, the boss Gorefiend possesses this. Part of the fight's mechanic is he'll devour the souls of members of the party, who can then help weaken him from the inside.

One of the bosses you fight in Dark Souls is the Gaping Dragon, a corrupted glutton whose insatiable appetite has, among other things, caused its entire upper torso to split in half vertically and become an immense snapping mouth.

In Five Nights at Freddy's 4, the fifth night introduces the player to the very dangerous Nightmare Fredbear, who has a mouth on his stomach. Fortunately, it's just for show, and it can't open.

In Toukiden, the large Oni Jollox and its palette swap Edax are mountainous humanoid gluttons that have a gaping maw on their bellies that's usually closed. When the Oni is enraged, this mouth opens and the creature bounces along on the ground like an enormous Pac-Man with trailing tentacles.

Web Comics

Johnny Wander features the Maws, crow demons with mouths on their stomachs instead of their beaks.

Desmond West from Monster Pulse has a mouth on his stomach. The twist is that his stomach walks beside him.

Western Animation

The minor Ben 10: Omniverse villain Tummyhead. Interestingly, the face in his stomach is the only one of the two that speaks.

On Dexter's Laboratory, Dexter meets an elephant-like alien that wants to eat him. Dex points out that he can't possibly fit through the alien's tiny snout... and then the alien opens its real mouth.

Ghash (also called "Mr. Ugly" by the heroes) on The Real Ghostbusters was a powerful poltergeist with a fanged mouth with a lolling tongue on his stomach. Even freakier, this was the mouth he talked with.

Ch'rell also, when in his Shredder suit. In a Bad Future where he manages to take over the world, he occupies the head area of the mech instead, though.

In the Adventure Time episode "Five Short Graybles", Princess Bubblegum spends a copious amount of time perfecting the greatest sandwich ever, and gives it to Cinnamon Bun, who promptly shoves it in his stomach. The stomach then sucks in the sandwich a few seconds prior to puking it out all over PB.

Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated: The "Headless Horror" (based on the Blemmyae), which has no head, eyes on its chest and a mouth on its stomach, appears in episode 22 of the series, pursuing adventurer Rick Spartan. It's really his wife, who just wants him to retire so they can live a normal life.

Real Life

Flatworms have their mouths, which are also the only opening in their digestive system, in the middle of their belly.

Community

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